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PESTS OF FORAGES AND PASTURE
Extracted from INSECT and related PESTS of FIELD CROPS (AG-271)
Dated 5/82
Placed on the Web 7/96 by the Center for Integrated Pest Management, NCSU
Based on 1980 estimates, North Carolina forages and pastures
comprise a total of over 900,000 hectares (about 2,222,000 acres).
This acreage includes not only improved and unimproved pasture but
also legume and grass hay crops. Since many different kinds of
plants fall into the category of forages, it is not surprising that
the insect pests attacking these crops are just as numerous and
varied. Several hundred species are associated with alfalfa alone.
Fortunately, only a few of these are economically important. The
alfalfa weevil remains the primary pest problem of alfalfa, while
white grubs are the corresponding threat to grass forages. Although
the number of serious pests is few, their chemical control poses
the problem of insecticide residues.
Key to Pests of Forages and Pasture
A. Chewing insects that feed above ground
Caterpillars - All moth larvae described in this
section have three pairs of legs near the head and five pairs of
prolegs.
Armyworms - Usually 30 to 40 mm long when
fully grown, these smooth-skinned caterpillars are voracious
foliage feeders.
Armyworm (true) - The larva is
basically yellowish- or greenish-brown with three dark,
longitudinal stripes and is 30 to 35 mm long when fully grown. The
head capsule has markings like those of the fall armyworm, but they
are lighter or less intense (Fig. A). Feeding primarily at
night, the armyworm often does much damage to the tender, succulent
foliage of seedling grasses. During the day, this caterpillar
usually hides among debris on the soil surface.
Fall armyworm - The green, brown, or
black larva may be as long as 40 mm and has a dark head capsule
usually marked with a pale, but distinct, inverted "Y" (Fig. B).
It has a black, longitudinal stripe down each side of its body and
a yellowish-gray stripe down its back. As its name implies, damage
is most prevalent in lush grass crops during late summer and
fall.
Cutworms - These fat worms may be as long
as 45 mm and curl up when disturbed. Depending upon their stage of
development, cutworms may sever seedlings at the soil line or feed
on foliage.
Black cutworm - This caterpillar
varies from gray to black in color, often appearing greasy. The
skin of this cutworm is granulated (as seen under a 10X hand lens),
the granules resembling rounded, flattened pebbles (Fig. A). It
burrows in soil and debris during the day and, when mature, cuts or
partially severs seedlings near the soil line at night. When
immature, the larva feeds primarily on foliage.
Granulate cutworm - This caterpillar
has a pale brown head, a dark brown band dow its back, and brown
sides with faint stripes. The skin granules of this cutworm are
like blunt cones as high as they are wide (Fig. B).
Variegated cutworm - This climbing
cutworm feeds on foliage, buds, and fruit. Its smooth-skinned body
is pale gray to dark brown with a row of yellow or orange spots
down the middle of the back. A black spot and a yellow spot occur
on the eighth abdominal segment.
Sod webworms -
Several kinds of sod webworm
caterpillars consume leaves and tender new growth. Basically
greenish with black spots, they are 16 to 19 mm long when mature.
Silky webbing near the soil line is often found in association with
these foliage-feeding caterpillars.
Grasshoppers - Full grown grasshoppers
are 19 to 33 mm long. They consume foliage as well as sever
stalks.
Weevils - A few species of small, dark, snout
beetles (Fig. A to B) feed on the foliage of legume forage and
pasture crops.
Alfalfa weevil
- The dark brown, gray-mottled weevil, less than 6 mm long, has a darker stripe down its
back more than half the length of the body. Its snout is at least
twice as long as it is wide (Fig. A). This pest shreds leaves
and destroys growing alfalfa terminals.
Clover root curculio - This dark-colored
weevil, 3 to 5 mm long, has a short, stocky snout about as long as
it is wide (Fig. B). The curculio makes small, crescent-shaped
notches in the leaves of alfalfa and clover. Small plants may be
defoliated as soon as they emerge from the ground.
Weevil larvae - These soft-bodied, legless larvae
feed on leaves.
Alfalfa weevil larva - This slender, black-headed larva is green with white, longitudinal stripes. Less than
10 mm long, it shreds leaves and destroys growing terminals of
alfalfa.
Clover leaf weevil larva - Reaching a
mature length of 12 to 13 mm, this stocky, greenish or yellowish
larva has a white or pink line down the center of its back and a
dark line along each side. Leaves of infested plants become full of
small holes and irregular patches.
B. Pests that suck sap from the plant (Fig. A to E).
Aphids - These small, pear-shaped, winged or
wingless insects (Fig. A) congregate primarily on the underside
of leaves. They extract sap, causing the foliage to turn yellow,
and then excrete a sweet, sticky, substance known as "honeydew."
Black sooty mold grows on the surface of this excretion.
Cowpea aphid - the adult of this species is
black with white appendages and grows to 2 mm long. The nymph is
pale gray with a powdery coating.
Pea aphid - This pale green aphid may be as
long as 4 mm and has long, slender cornicles.
Meadow spittlebug - Both the gray, brown, or
spotted, 6-mm-long adult (Fig. B) and the orange, yellow, or
pale green nymph extract plant sap. Hosts do not turn yellow, but
may wilt, become stunted, develop a terminal rosette, and produce
a lower yield. Nymphs are surrounded by white, frothy masses
resembling spittle.
Potato leafhopper - This
3-mm-long insect (Fig. C) is yellowish to pale green with yellow to dark green spots,
which can be observed under magnification. It pierces and extracts
sap from leaf veins, causing yellowing of leaves, loss of vigor, or
death of the plant.
Threecornered alfalfa hopper - The straw-colored
nymph (about 4.6 mm long) and the green adult (6.0 to 6.5 mm long)
are both wedge-shaped, the front of the body being widest (Fig. D). Their feeding and egg-laying activities on the lower stem
may cause stem breakage and lodging.
Twospotted spider mite - This almost microscopic,
eight-legged (larva six-legged) pest (Fig. E) feeds on the
underside of leaves, often "spinning" a network of silken webs on
which to travel and deposit eggs. Damage is indicated by a white
cast to the leaves when viewed from a distance. This mite is
identified by the adult female which is yellowish- to dark green
with two or four dark, dorsal spots.
C. Insects that attack plants underground (Fig. A to B).
Clover root curculio grub - Roots are scored and
girdled near the crown by a fleshy, legless, grayish-white grub
measuring about 5 mm long when fully grown (Fig. A).
White grubs - These C-shaped, six-legged grubs
(Fig. B) are 5 to 48 mm long. They eat or sever roots, thereby
causing reduced plant growth or death, especially during drought.
Small localized areas of unhealthy plants are often indicative of
a white grub infestation. Fluffy soil may also accompany severely
damaged spots.